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PlotLeads · New York, New York

Roofers contact list in New York, New York — for sales teams

PlotLeads sells a list of 500+ roofer businesses in New York, New York, sourced from Google Maps — each with company name, direct phone, website, and Google rating, exported as CSV. A one-time $35 purchase (no subscription, credits never expire), built for SDRs and agencies prospecting the New York roofer market.

by Usama Zafar, who builds and maintains PlotLeads

Get the full list — $35

Each row: company name, direct phone, website, Google rating. Email is available in enriched mode (~50% of home-services listings, 3 credits per emailed row).

Sample roofer businesses in New York

BusinessPhoneWebsiteRating
Goldenberg Roofing NYC(212) 457-1324Visit4.9 (95)
NY Roofing(646) 838-0441Visit4.9 (135)
Mamaroneck Roofing & Siding(914) 444-93605 (1)
NYC Commercial Roofing Contractors(718) 799-3668Visit4.9 (31)
A & D Roofing Co., Inc.(844) 674-0556Visit4.7 (25)

In our current sample of 50 Roofers across New York, New York, 42 (84%) list a website and the median Google rating is 5.0, and 13 carry 100+ Google reviews.

That mix is the useful part for a sales team: the 84% with a website are reachable by email and web-form outreach, not just cold calls, and the firms carrying 100+ reviews are the established operators most likely to have budget for the software, materials, financing, and insurance services SDRs sell into the trade — so sort by review volume to surface the busiest ones first. Every figure here is computed from real, current Google Maps listings in New York, the same data the full PlotLeads Roofer list is built from — so it reflects the New York, New York Roofers market as it stands today, not a broker file from last year.

This is a free 5-business preview. The paid list contains 500+ Roofer contacts in New York, New York, sourced from Google Maps — built for sales teams and agencies. See how these lists are built.

Want a full sample to keep? Get a free 50-lead sample by email →

The roofer market in New York

Roofing in New York City is mostly a flat-roof problem. The brownstones of Brooklyn, the prewar co-ops of Manhattan, and the multifamily walk-ups across Queens almost all sit under low-slope membranes — EPDM, modified bitumen, or built-up tar — not the pitched shingles common elsewhere. Those surfaces pond water, and after a hard nor'easter or a winter of freeze-thaw they crack at the seams and around parapet walls and bulkheads. Add Department of Buildings permitting, facade rules, and landmark-district restrictions in neighborhoods like Park Slope or the Upper West Side, and a roof replacement here is as much a paperwork job as a construction one. A contractor who knows DOB filing and co-op board approvals is worth far more than the cheapest bid.

Timing and access drive everything in the five boroughs. Crews must coordinate sidewalk sheds, hoisting permits, and Buildings Department sign-offs, and on occupied co-ops the work has to fit around residents and tight street parking. The best local roofers carry the insurance and filings these jobs demand and don't disappear when a leak resurfaces after the first hard rain — continuity is what separates the established firms from the transient ones on a five-story building.

Roofer pricing in New York

Expect to pay more in the five boroughs than almost anywhere in the country, driven by labor, parking, hoisting, and disposal costs. A flat-roof recoat or repair often runs $1,500–$6,000; a full low-slope membrane replacement on a typical townhouse lands around $12,000–$30,000, and larger multifamily buildings climb well past that. Permit and inspection fees add to the total. Prices vary with access, roof size, and how many old layers must be torn off.

Targeting roofers in New York

  1. A roofer licensed with the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection and carrying workers' comp for at-height crews is a payroll-running firm with the staff and overhead to justify estimating, scheduling, and lead-gen spend; put those ahead of the one-truck listings.
  2. Mentions of DOB permit filing and landmark or co-op board approvals point to larger multifamily and high-rise contracts — that filing fluency means real ticket size and recurring building accounts, which is where compliance, CRM, and insurance-claims pitches land.
  3. When a listing names a defined membrane system such as EPDM or modified bitumen and a material-plus-workmanship warranty, you are looking at a firm with a brand to protect and a marketing budget behind it — a fit for reputation, review, and lead-gen services.

Using this New York roofer list for outreach

New York's roofing market is dense and fragmented — thousands of operators span solo flat-roof specialists in the outer boroughs to established firms handling co-op and high-rise contracts in Manhattan. For an SDR or agency selling roofing software, materials, insurance, or lead-gen services, that fragmentation is the opportunity: most of these companies have a public phone and a thin web presence, and few are locked into national vendor relationships. Demand is steady year-round because flat-roof leaks surface after every hard rain and winter freeze-thaw, but outreach lands best in late winter and early spring as firms book the warm-season repair calendar. This list gives you the company name, direct phone, website, and Google rating for each roofer, so you can segment by review volume or web maturity and prioritize the established shops over one-truck operations before you ever pick up the phone.

Every flat-roof firm filing with the DOB across the five boroughs is a prospect, and this list hands you 500+ New York City roofers — company name, direct phone, website, and Google rating, exported from Google Maps for $35. Segment the co-op and high-rise filers from the one-truck listings before your first dial instead of building the list by hand.

Get the full New York roofer list

500+ contacts from Google Maps, CSV export, credits never expire.

Buy the list — $35